Dynamic Before-and-After

Use the sliders in any of the images below to see the before and the after of the respective image blended into each other. If you are using a tablet PC, simply tap on the image to move the slider to that position. The before image (single exposure straight out of the camera) is always shown on the left and the after image (fully processed final image) is on the right.

This is the before-and-after comparison of "The Parliament (HDR)". On the left side, you see the original 0 EV source photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image that is based on a 6-shot exposures with shutter speeds between 0.6s and 15s. The image was processed in Photomatix Pro 4.2 and Photoshop CS6.

This is the HDR before and after comparison of "Light my Way (HDR Vertorama)". The final image was created from 4x3 TIFF files (4 series of 3 autobracketed RAW images, +2, 0, -2EV that were converted to TIFFs using Abobe Camera RAW). The result of the HDR merging, tone-mapping, stitching, perspective correction, cropping, and retouching can be seen on the left. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop CS6.

This is the before-and-after comparison of "Santorini Cathedral (HDR)". On the left side, you see the original 0EV photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop. This image is based on a 6-shot autobracketing series with +2EV to -3EV in 1EV steps.

This is the before-and-after comparison of "The Alley (HDR)". On the left, you see the original 0EV photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop. This image is based on a 3-shot autobracketing series with -2, 0 and +2 EV.

This is the before-and-after comparison of "Sunset Gate (HDR)". On the left, you see the original 0EV photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop. This image is based on a standard 3-shot autobracketing series with +2, 0 and -2 ev.